Kenneth Josephson: In Retrospect

Octogenarian photographer Kenneth Josephson has chronicled the course of American life and artistic thought for generations. His imagery is diverse: a light bulb hanging in the center of several photographs of light bulbs; a photo of the pyramids of Giza held in front of the Chicago skyline; a car racing underneath a bridge at night, the street lights heightened by multiple exposure. But Josephson’s studies of the body hold the most enduring relevance: an image of a pencil held clinically at a woman’s hips, like a cosmetic surgeon’s scalpel; and a prefab cutout of a breast, held up to an actual breast, as if for the purpose of comparison to an ideal. These images are archetypal and chilling. Through April 27.

Ecologically themed art tends to be dull and sanctimonious, but not so in the hands of Wesley Younie. His idylls of environmental paradise lost abound with equal parts whimsy and intelligence. In the ...

Animal-themed art shows should be granted a special rung in hell. In 2008, Froelick devoted a show to horses and so did Butters. Yes, that was seven years ago, but the statute of limitations is far fr ...

Animal-themed art shows should be granted a special rung in hell. In 2008, Froelick devoted a show to horses and so did Butters. Yes, that was seven years ago, but the statute of limitations is far fr ...

Animal-themed art shows should be granted a special rung in hell. In 2008, Froelick devoted a show to horses and so did Butters. Yes, that was seven years ago, but the statute of limitations is far fr ...